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​1​   In the year Victoria came to the throne,​ on 9 acres by a river’s bend, (bought for £490) Joseph Dover built his mill.   yarn to weave, wool to knit, the raw fleece washed, carded, scribbled, tentered, dyed, spun and woven (back parlour or mill shed) finished, sold.   Today the fleeces are burnt at the farm, and the sheds and lofts display colourful crafts. The past is collected in sepia photographs, strange heritaged tools. The present hides in figures on the footfall,   those costings for the café.   In an August of grey cloud and persistent rain, the sun on occasion shakes the building into life; it filters through the tall riverside trees, makes swathes of coloured light swim across the wooden floors.   2 ​ The studio, cool on the hottest day, is graced with garden flowers, and the business of making everywhere. Days fold work into the pleasure of small gestures of care, Satie’s tenderest song a litany under the breath.   When toes meet beneath a table shared, this touch registers the slow wonder of it all; that ‘being here’ in this expansive place of stone and wood, textured always with the white noised rush of water.   At night we steal back in to sit together by a single lamp: to decipher Henry’s mimetic prose of estuary, moor and river; ponder Robert’s quartets in A, every phrase singing Clara, Clara . . .   Later, lights extinguished we move in the pitch of darkness through the long galleries, carefully down the invisible stairs.   Outside, in the coloured silence of the river’s run, the hills carry the sky cloud-haunted, star-strewn. moon-lit.
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Jan 7, 2013
Jan 7, 2013 at 1:30 AM UTC
Sense of Place: Summer
​1​   In the year Victoria came to the throne,​ on 9 acres by a river’s bend, (bought for £490) Joseph Dover built his mill.   yarn to weave, wool to knit, the raw fleece washed, carded, scribbled, tentered, dyed, spun and woven (back parlour or mill shed) finished, sold.   Today the fleeces are burnt at the farm, and the sheds and lofts display colourful crafts. The past is collected in sepia photographs, strange heritaged tools. The present hides in figures on the footfall,   those costings for the café.   In an August of grey cloud and persistent rain, the sun on occasion shakes the building into life; it filters through the tall riverside trees, makes swathes of coloured light swim across the wooden floors.   2 ​ The studio, cool on the hottest day, is graced with garden flowers, and the business of making everywhere. Days fold work into the pleasure of small gestures of care, Satie’s tenderest song a litany under the breath.   When toes meet beneath a table shared, this touch registers the slow wonder of it all; that ‘being here’ in this expansive place of stone and wood, textured always with the white noised rush of water.   At night we steal back in to sit together by a single lamp: to decipher Henry’s mimetic prose of estuary, moor and river; ponder Robert’s quartets in A, every phrase singing Clara, Clara . . .   Later, lights extinguished we move in the pitch of darkness through the long galleries, carefully down the invisible stairs.   Outside, in the coloured silence of the river’s run, the hills carry the sky cloud-haunted, star-strewn. moon-lit.
nigel-morgan
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Jan 7, 2013
Jan 7, 2013 at 1:30 AM UTC
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